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Debunking Satoshi Nakamoto's Wallet Hacking Rumors — Complete Technical Timeline Analysis
There are often rumors online about Satoshi Nakamoto’s wallet, with the most common being “12 mnemonic words of Satoshi have been cracked, 10 of them are compromised, and it’s about to be brute-forced.” Such claims repeatedly appear in the crypto community but fail under technical scrutiny. To understand why this is completely unfounded, we need to start with the early technical architecture of Bitcoin.
Mnemonic phrases simply did not exist for Satoshi
The key fact is: Satoshi’s wallet did not use mnemonic phrases at all.
This conclusion may seem simple, but the underlying technical logic is often overlooked. The timeline is the first solid proof. Satoshi created the Bitcoin Genesis Block in January 2009, but the BIP39 standard for mnemonic phrases was only officially proposed in 2013—four years later.
Satoshi used the earliest version of the Bitcoin Core client. During that period, wallet files used the wallet.dat format, which directly stored private keys without any mnemonic mechanism for generation or recovery. In other words, backing up a wallet meant simply copying the wallet.dat file. Since Satoshi was the developer of Bitcoin’s code, he naturally used the most straightforward wallet management method available at the time—namely, the wallet.dat private key file, not a nonexistent mnemonic phrase scheme.
The real distribution of over 22,000 addresses
Regarding how much Bitcoin Satoshi owns and how many addresses hold these coins, blockchain data provides a clear answer.
In the early blocks, mining followed a specific pattern from Block 1 to Block 36 (excluding Block 9). This pattern reflects the “fingerprint” of the same mining machine, known as the “Patoshi pattern,” identified by researchers. Using this unique pattern, we can recognize blocks mined directly by Satoshi.
Based on block reward calculations, Satoshi’s total mined Bitcoin amounts to approximately 1,125,150 BTC (with each block reward being 50 BTC). Importantly, the vast majority of these coins have never been spent and have remained dormant for a long time.
More significantly, these coins are not concentrated in just one or a few addresses but are spread across over 22,000 different addresses (from about 22,500 block rewards). Although the number of addresses is large, on-chain data strongly suggests these addresses are controlled by the same entity—Satoshi—using one or a few early wallets.
Why “cracking” is technically impossible
Once you understand the address distribution, a crucial conclusion emerges: Satoshi’s Bitcoin holdings are not vulnerable to cracking based on current technology.
First, since these coins have never been spent, Satoshi’s public keys have never been exposed on the blockchain. In Bitcoin’s security model, public keys are only revealed when a transaction is signed. Without any transaction records, there is no attack surface to exploit.
Second, Satoshi used the wallet.dat format for private keys, not modern BIP39 mnemonic phrases. This difference is critical to the entire cracking hypothesis—while BIP39 mnemonic phrases could theoretically be vulnerable to brute-force attacks (assuming someone has a 12 or 24-word seed), wallet.dat stores encrypted private keys directly, making the difficulty of cracking vastly different.
Third, even considering future quantum computing threats, Satoshi’s Bitcoin holdings have unique protections. Quantum computers could threaten elliptic curve cryptography, but only if the public key is known. Since Satoshi’s public keys have never been exposed, quantum attacks cannot leverage existing blockchain information to crack the wallet.
Conclusion
In summary, the rumors online about “Satoshi’s wallet with 12 mnemonic words being cracked” are unfounded on multiple levels: the timeline proves BIP39 mnemonic concepts did not apply to Satoshi; blockchain data shows the coins are spread across over 22,000 addresses; and the fact that the funds have never moved means the public keys remain hidden. These facts together completely rule out any possibility of cracking the wallet. Understanding these technical details is crucial for appreciating Bitcoin’s security and for discerning false information within the crypto community.